Turner v. East Side Canal & Irrigation Co.

142 P. 69, 168 Cal. 103, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 296
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1914
DocketSac. No. 1926.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 142 P. 69 (Turner v. East Side Canal & Irrigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. East Side Canal & Irrigation Co., 142 P. 69, 168 Cal. 103, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 296 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The plaintiffs appeal from the part of the judgment declaring that the defendant “is entitled to divert” from the San Joaquin River, at a point above plaintiff’s land, two hundred and eighty-one cubic feet of water per second, “for sale, rental and distribution, for the irrigation of land and for the watering of stock and domestic uses thereon,” and quieting the title of the defendant to said water “against plaintiffs as the owners of the riparian lands above described.”

The plaintiffs each own a large body of land on and near the San Joaquin River. Other large bodies of land belonging, respectively, to J. J. Stevinson, the Sharon estate, and J. W. Mitchell, lie further down the river and were, in part at least, riparian' thereto. The defendant corporation was formed by .Stevinson and Mitchell in 1887, mainly as an agency by means of which to divert water from the river and carry it to their lands. In order to do this, it was found necessary or convenient to take the water from the river at a point above the lands of the plaintiffs herein and carry it through a canal over the intervening lands of the plaintiffs and others to the Stevinson and Mitchell lands. The canal company obtained rights of way through said intervening *105 lands, made the canal thereon and by a dam in the river took water therefrom into the canal and carried it therein to the lands below. This diversion began in the year 1888. The plaintiffs’ lands, at that time, all belonged to William C. Turner. In March, 1906, some three thousand acres of it were sold and conveyed to the Las Animas & San Joaquin Land Company, hereinafter designated the “Land Company.”

On September 28,1906, the plaintiffs began this action. The complaint alleges that for two years past the defendant, by means of said dam and canal, had been taking water from the river above plaintiffs’ lands, carrying it through the canal to the lands below, not riparian to the river, and there discharging it; that it had no right to take from the river any greater flow than seventy-five cubic feet per second, at any stage, and no right at any time to take a quantity that would leave less than twenty-five cubic feet per second flowing down the river over its dam, but that it claimed the right to divert and carry below plaintiffs’ lands a flow of five hundred cubic feet per second, and threatened and intended to do so. They prayed for an injunction to prevent the excessive diversion.

In its answer the defendant alleged that it had acquired by prescription the right to take from the river at said dam a flow of five hundred cubic feet of water per second when that quantity was then flowing, and to take the entire flow when there was less, and to carry the same through the canal to points below the plaintiffs ’ lands and there sell and distribute the same for use on other lands.

One of the important questions arising in the case is whether the use made by the defendant of the water it diverted, and which was adjudged to belong to it, was of a character adverse to plaintiffs and such as to give the defendant a prescriptive right to continue the diversion. The court found that ever since the year 1888, the defendant had been continuously diverting into the canal at the said dam 281 cubic feet per second of the water of the river and causing the same to run down the canal and to be applied to beneficial use as follows: It delivered seventy cubic feet per second upon five thousand six hundred acres of land for the irrigation thereof, one thousand four hundred acres of which were lands described in the complaint, as belonging to the plaintiff, Land Company, and four thousand two hundred acres thereof were lands owned by Miller & Lux, which said water was used for *106 the irrigation of said lands; it delivered to other lands of Miller & Lux, five hundred acres in extent, ten cubic feet per second; it delivered to seven hundred and fifty acres of land belonging to the Sharon Estate fifteen cubic feet per second ; it delivered to two thousand five hundred acres of land belonging to the Estate of Mitchell fifty cubic feet per second; it delivered to four thousand acres belonging to Stevinson eighty cubic feet per second, all of which water was used upon the said lands, respectively, for the irrigation thereof, making the total amount of two hundred and twenty-five cubic feet per second actually put to beneficial use, and that the remaining fifty-six cubic feet per second of the water so diverted was necessarily lost by unavoidable seepage and evaporation in transmission. It further found that the defendant made said diversion for said uses openly, uninterruptedly, and under a claim of right to do so, and adversely to the plaintiffs and all other persons; that the defendant “took and appropriated said quantity of 281” second feet of flowing water “for the purpose and with the intention of supplying the same, for beneficial purposes, to the inhabitants of the lands situated along the line of and below the water in said canal, for the irrigation of the land so situated, and for the sale, rental and distribution by said defendant to all persons desiring to use the same”; that said lands constituted a “farming neighborhood”; that the plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest at all times knew that said quantity of water was being so diverted and used under a claim of right; that never, prior to June 12,1906, did they deny or dispute said right; that many owners of other lands along the canal, relying on the neglect and failure of the plaintiffs to deny or dispute said right, obtained water from year to year from the defendant, improved their lands by planting trees, vines, and alfalfa, and irrigated the same with water from said canal, and that the trees, vines, and alfalfa would perish if deprived of said water.

The court also made a general finding that the “defendant is the owner of and has the right to use and divert of the water naturally flowing in the San Joaquin River’’"two hundred and eighty-one second feet when that quantity is flowing in the river, and the entire flow when there is less than two hundred and eighty-one second feet. The respondent contends that this general finding is supported by evidence of uses upon other lands than those above set forth and particularly found, *107 and that this is sufficient to sustain the general finding. It is true that if the general finding was intended to be independent of the particular facts found, it would be upheld if there was enough evidence to sustain it, regardless of the legal effect of the particular facts. But this finding is not of that character. The findings clearly show that the two hundred and eighty-one second feet referred to in the general finding is made up of that mentioned in the particular findings, above recited, in which the court sets forth in detail the exact places where the water was used and the quantities used on each place and necessarily consumed in transmission, going to make up the two hundred and eighty-one second feet, and that the right to that quantity was gained solely by virtue of the delivery upon these lands and the use thereon of the respective quantities mentioned. It is therefore unnecessary to further consider the claim that there was evidence of adverse diversion and use upon other lands than those specifically mentioned.

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Related

Morley Construction Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co.
300 U.S. 185 (Supreme Court, 1937)
Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District v. Paulson
242 P. 494 (California Court of Appeal, 1925)
Turner v. East Side Canal & Irrigation Co.
147 P. 579 (California Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 P. 69, 168 Cal. 103, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-east-side-canal-irrigation-co-cal-1914.